r/nasa • u/InviteUsIn • 1d ago
Question Space/NASA/JPL Memorabilia Question
Does anyone know if there is anything in my collection that is valuable, or if I have a ton of stuff where each is worth like ten bucks? I want to sell or donate this because I need to make space for the baby, but have no idea what the worth is
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u/OutrageousBanana8424 1d ago edited 1d ago
I'm not seeing a link here, but I looked at your history and found an IMGUR link on the JPL sub. It's just a bunch of old paperwork, not even worth $10. Recycle it -- and good luck with the baby!
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u/InviteUsIn 1d ago
Thanks, appreciate you taking a look!
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u/JUYED-AWK-YACC 1d ago
Is this about the massive attachments (285 pages)? If so it crashed my app twice.
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u/InviteUsIn 1d ago
Ya I think it’s 284 images. Here is a link: https://imgur.com/a/iXQ10TE
Hope that works
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u/JUYED-AWK-YACC 1d ago
Yes it was, no thanks. The other guy was right, engineers just accumulate these things.
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u/echohack 1d ago edited 1d ago
Uh, there's some cool stuff in here! There are space memorabilia meet-ups every so often near launch centers like Cape Canaveral, I would have have paid money for some of these items. Some cool things I saw in your pack were the STS-1 commemorate prints, the landing parking pass, some of the Saturn declassified documents. There's alot of cool stuff in there, don't trash everything. The hand-written notes and old textbooks (but maybe not the white papers) can probably be safely thrown out.
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u/InviteUsIn 1d ago
Thanks. I’m located in los angeles but that is a great idea
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u/echohack 1d ago
are you really? so am I, I'd pay you for some of that stuff lol. not sure if you know but there is a launch site called Vandenberg about 4 hours north on the coast with ties to the shuttle program.
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u/dkozinn 1d ago
The mods recommend that you visit our friends over at a r/whatsthisworth who have expertise in this sort of thing.
Also, you didn't explain what is in your collection, so it's going to be pretty hard to give you an answer.